NEWS & VIEWS


FILTER BY

The Office of Tax Simplification’s CGT Review: The Final Report

The Office of Tax Simplification (OTS) has finally published the final report of their review of capital gains tax (CGT).

The first report, ‘Simplifying by design’, was published in November 2020 and considered the policy design and principles underpinning the tax. The second report, published this month, considers a range of key practical, technical and administrative issues regarding the present policy design principles of CGT.

Both documents are based on findings from the OTS’s analysis of evidence and feedback gathered during a consultation exercise running from July to November 2020.  The OTS received contributions from representative bodies, professional advisers, businesses, academics, public survey and a specially formed Consultative Committee. The latest report highlights a broader concern about the low level of public awareness of the tax, and the extent to which the administrative systems could do much more to support taxpayers.

An overview

The OTS make 14 recommendations. Three recommendations aim to make a difference over the long term, while some focus on standalone issues. The majority of the recommendations address issues that affect significant groups of people. The 14 recommendations cover the following areas:

  • Main home.
  • Divorce and separation.
  • Business issues.
  • Investor issues.
  • Land and property issues.

The ‘Investor Issues’ section mainly focussed on the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS). These schemes are intended to provide support for growth investment in start-up and early-stage companies by giving generous tax reliefs to investors who subscribe in cash for new shares in those companies. However, evidence was also considered regarding foreign assets.

A closer look: CGT and foreign assets

HMRC statistics suggest that approximately one in ten people in the UK have foreign assets. The examples highlighted in the report show that when a UK resident taxpayer buys or sells a foreign asset their acquisition cost and proceeds are converted into sterling at “the respective point in time in order to calculate the gain/loss”. It goes on to explain that their actual gain/loss in the foreign currency asset is “ignored” for CGT purposes. As a result, the OTS concluded that the current system means that a tax liability can arise when there is a gain “as a result of foreign currencies appreciating against sterling”. Equally, it added, a taxable loss could arise “due a weakening of sterling against the foreign currency.”

The OTS noted that there is also a specific CGT exemption for foreign exchange gains/losses that result from transfers in a foreign currency bank account. Therefore, when funds are added to the bank account or removed no CGT is liable. The OTS suggests that it would be simpler if the calculation of capital gains/losses resulting from the disposal of a foreign asset were completed in the foreign currency and then converted to sterling at the exchange rate on the date of disposal.  This adjustment to the rules would remove the need to calculate the sterling equivalent of the acquisition cost and of any subsequent costs.

The report argued that this would be “simpler” for those taxpayers who operate foreign bank accounts and “more intuitive” for those reinvesting into foreign assets in the same country. It added that this would bring the position into line with the treatment with foreign currency bank accounts where taxpayers are not taxed on currency gains. Therefore, a recommendation that we at FSL are examining closely is the suggestion for when calculating foreign assets. The OTS report recommends that the government should consider whether gains or losses on foreign assets should be “calculated in the relevant foreign currency and then converted into sterling”.

FSL’s response

Nonetheless, though it is lengthy, there were no major policy change recommendations in the report that would alter the current system. It must be noted, however, these could still come as part of the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement. As result, FSL will monitor the outputs from the review closely to ensure there is minimal disruption to CGiX users.

If you have any concerns about the impact of the review on CGiX or would like to discuss further, please contact FSLBA&I@financialsoftware.co.uk